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A Level Science - Blog Posts

4 years ago

Water: Making a Splash

You don’t have to be a genius to know that water is essential for life. After all, we’re made up of it, we sweat it, we drink it, some people even opt to give birth in it. But what is it about two hydrogens and an oxygen which make it so sensational?

The answer is to do with water’s structure. A H2O molecule is covalently bonded, which means each atom shares electrons. In this case, the covalent bonds are between two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Oxygen is cool because it is highly electronegative. Electronegativity is the ability for one atom to “pull” the electrons towards it in a covalent bond. Since oxygen is highly electronegative, it pulls the electrons in the bond towards it which gives the oxygen a slight negative charge because of the electron proximity. This is represented by  δ- (delta negative). The hydrogen is therefore δ+ (delta positive) and has a slight positive charge. Overall, the molecule is said to be polar, or to be dipolar in nature, because there is a difference in charge across the molecule.

Water being a dipole gives it different properties, which you need to know about if you are sitting the AS or A level biology exam. 

A quick note on hydrogen bonding…

Being a dipole, water has areas of different charge. When many molecules come together, hydrogen bonds can form between H+ on one molecule and O- on another, shown in the diagram with a dashed line. 

Water: Making A Splash

It is hydrogen bonds which give water a property called surface tension. Water has a high tendency to ‘stick together’, called cohesion. This is important in water transport through the xylem in later units. Surface tension is a bit like a “skin” because it can allow small organisms to walk along it. It occurs because water molecules on the surface bond to their neighbours much like throughout the whole liquid, but since one side is exposed to air and cannot form hydrogen bonds upwards, they will form stronger ones with the molecules beside them. The net attraction is downwards.

Water is good as a temperature buffer too. Heating a substance makes its particles gain more kinetic energy and therefore the overall temperature rises since particles are moving faster. With water, the temperature doesn’t rise as much as other liquids do. This is because it takes more heat energy to raise the temperature of water by 1 degree - it has a high specific heat capacity due to the many hydrogen bonds that have to be broken (even though they are weak on their own). It takes a lot of heat energy for water to raise its temperature significantly. 

This is useful in organisms because our cells are mostly water, which can absorb heat energy without raising our temperature very much. Therefore it “buffers” or reduces heat changes. Seas, lakes and oceans are all good environments to live in because they do not change temperature as quickly as air. Aquatic organisms have an environment with less temperature fluctuation than land organisms.

Having a high latent heat of vaporisation means water can cool down organisms by evaporating a small amount of water. Evaporation is when water becomes a gas due to the large amount of KE. Fast-moving molecules are removed when this occurs and take their energy with them, therefore decreasing the amount of energy left behind and cooling it. Sweat is a good example of high latent heat of vaporisation. A small quantity of water is removed with a large cooling effect, meaning temperature is stabilised without losing a lot of water.

Water is also a good solvent (a substance which can dissolve other substances) and this is due to more hydrogen bonding. Water’s charges of H+ and O- are attracted to the positive and negative charges on molecules and therefore solutes such as NaCl are split into Na+ and Cl-, then spread out. Solvent properties are important in transport (such as blood plasma dissolving glucose, vitamins, urea etc), metabolic reactions, urine production and mineral transportation through the xylem and phloem in plants.

Water molecules can also take place in metabolic reactions. Hydrolysis reactions involve breaking down the covalent bonds between hydrogen and oxygen and making new ones, for example, in digestion. Condensation reactions produce water as a byproduct e.g. the formation of phosphodiester bonds. Water is referred to as a metabolite.

Summary

Water is a dipole due to the slight opposite charges on oxygen and hydrogen atoms.

Hydrogen bonds form between hydrogens on one water molecule and oxygens on another. 

Because of this, water has the tendency to stick to itself - cohesion. Cohesion is the reason for surface tension.

Water is a good temperature buffer because of its high specific heat capacity. It takes a lot of energy to raise the temperature by a degree.

Water has a high latent heat of vaporisation so evaporating a little has a large cooling effect.

Water is a good solvent because of how the hydrogen bonds attract charged molecules and separate them. This is useful for transporting solutions.

Water is a metabolite important for hydrolysis reactions and produced in condensation reactions.

Happy studying!


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4 years ago

Covalent and Dative Bonds

Covalent and dative (sometimes called co-ordinate) bonds occur between two or more non-metals,  e.g. carbon dioxide, water, methane and even diamond. But what actually are they?

A covalent bond is a chemical bond that involves the sharing of electron pairs between atoms. They are found in molecular elements or compounds such as chlorine or sulfur, but also in macromolecular elements and compounds like SiO2 and graphite. Covalent bonds are also found in molecular ions such as NH4+ and HCO3-.

Single covalent bonds have just one shared pair of electrons. Regularly, each atom provides one unpaired electron (the amount of unpaired electrons is usually equal to the number of covalent bonds which can be made) in the bond. Double covalent bonds have two shared pairs of electrons, represented by a double line between atoms, for example, O=C=O (CO2). Triple covalent bonds can also occur such as those in N ≡ N.

Dot and cross diagrams represent the arrangement of electrons in covalently bonded molecules. A shared pair of electrons is represented by a dot and a cross to show that the electrons come from different atoms.

Unpaired electrons are used to form covalent bonds as previously mentioned. The unpaired electrons in orbitals of one atom can be shared with another unpaired electron in an orbital but sometimes atoms can promote electrons into  unoccupied orbitals in the same energy level to form more bonds. This does not always occur, however, meaning different compounds can be formed - PCl3 and PCl4 are examples of this.

Covalent And Dative Bonds

An example where promotion is used is in sulfur hexafluoride (SF6). The regular configuration of sulfur atoms is 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p4. It promotes, as shown in the diagram (see excited state), two electrons: one from the 3s electrons to the 3d orbital and one from the 3p to the 3d. Therefore there are 6 unpaired electrons for fluorine atoms to join. It has an octahedral structure.

Covalent And Dative Bonds

An atom which has a lone pair (a pair of electrons uninvolved in bonding) of electrons can form a coordinate bond with the empty orbital of another atom. It essentially donates an electron into this orbital which when formed, acts the same as a normal covalent bond. A coordinate bond therefore contains a shared pair of electrons that have come from one atom.

Covalent And Dative Bonds

When ammonia reacts with a H+ ion, a coordinate bond is formed between the lone pair on the ammonia molecule and the empty 1s sub-shell in the H+ ion. An arrow represents the dative covalent bond (coordinate bond). Charges on the final ion must be showed.

Summary

A covalent bond is a chemical bond that involves the sharing of electron pairs between atoms. They are found in molecular elements or compounds as well as in macromolecular elements and compounds. Also found in molecular ions.

Single covalent bonds have just one shared pair of electrons.  Double covalent bonds have two shared pairs of electrons, represented by a double line between atoms. Triple covalent bonds can also occur.

Dot and cross diagrams represent the arrangement of electrons in covalently bonded molecules. A shared pair of electrons is represented by a dot and a cross to show that the electrons come from different atoms.

Unpaired electrons are used to form covalent bonds - they can be shared with another unpaired electron in an orbital but sometimes atoms can promote electrons into unoccupied orbitals in the same energy level to form more bonds. This does not always occur, however, meaning different compounds can be formed.

An example where promotion is used is in sulfur hexafluoride (SF6). 

An atom which has a lone pair (a pair of electrons uninvolved in bonding) of electrons can form a coordinate bond with the empty orbital of another atom.

 It donates an electron into this orbital which when formed, acts the same as a normal covalent bond. A coordinate bond therefore contains a shared pair of electrons that have come from one atom.

When ammonia reacts with a H+ ion, a coordinate bond is formed between the lone pair on the ammonia molecule and the empty 1s sub-shell in the H+ ion. An arrow represents the dative covalent bond (coordinate bond). Charges on the final ion must be showed.


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4 years ago

Breaking Down Alkanes - isn’t it cracking?

Unfortunately, if you’re sitting your A Level chemistry exam, you need to know a little more than the basic properties of alkanes outlined in my last post. Luckily though, this post takes you through fractional distillation and the two types of cracking - isn’t that convenient?

Crude oil contains carbon compounds formed by the effects of pressure and high temperature on plant and animal remnants. It is viscious, black and found in rocks beneath the earth’s surface. It is a mixture of mainly alkane hydrocarbons which are separated by a process called fractional distillation. Crude oil is essential because it is burned as a fuel and each fraction has different properties e.g. diesel, petrol, jet fuel.

Fractional distillation is the continual evaporation and condensation of a mixture which causes fractions to split due to a difference in boiling point. It is important to note that fractional distillation does not separate crude oil into pure compounds but rather less complex mixtures. Fractions are groups of compounds that have similar boiling points and are removed at the same level of a fractionating column.

The first step in this process is to heat crude oil in a furnace until some changes state from a liquid to a vapour. This mixture goes up a fractionating tower or column which is hotter at the bottom than the top and reaches a layer which is cool enough to condense and be collected. Shorter chain molecules are collected at the top where it is cooler since they have lower boiling points.

Breaking Down Alkanes - Isn’t It Cracking?

As you go down the fractionating column, bear in mind that: the column temperature increases, the boiling point increases, the number of carbon atoms increases and the strength of the Van der Waals’ between molecules increases.

Different fractions have different usefulnesses and often, it is the fractions with lower boiling points and shorter chains which are much more purposeful. Therefore there needs to be a process to getting shorter chains because they are the least abundant in crude oil samples. To meet demand, long chain molecules that are less useful are broken down into shorter chain molecules. This is done by cracking.

Cracking is a process where long chain hydrocarbon molecules are broken down into shorter chain molecules which are in high demand. This can be done one of two ways - thermal or catalytic.

Thermal cracking involves heating long chain alkanes to high temperatures - usually between 1000 - 1200K. It also uses high pressures up to 70atm and takes just one second. It only needs a second because the conditions could decompose the molecule completely to produce carbon and hydrogen instead. The conditions produce shorter chain alkanes and mostly alkenes.

A typical equation for this:

Breaking Down Alkanes - Isn’t It Cracking?

Decane -> octane + ethene

C10H22 -> C8H18 + C2H4

Catalytic cracking also breaks down long alkanes by heat under pressure using the presence of a zeolite catalyst. Temperature used is approx. 800-1000K and the pressure is often between 1-2 atm. Zeolite is an acidic mineral with a honeycomb structure, made from aluminium oxide and silicion dioxide. The honeycomb structure gives the catalyst a larger surface area which increases ROR. Factories which catalytically crack are often operated continuously for around 3 years at a time and produce branched alkanes, cycloalkanes and aromatic compounds.

You need to be able to compare the conditions of catalytic and thermal cracking for the A Level exam. Know that thermal cracking has a high temperature and pressure, a short duration, no catalyst and produces a high percentage of alkenes and some short chain alkanes. Catalytic uses a catalyst, a high temperature, a low pressure and produces aromatic hydrocarbons and motor fuels.

SUMMARY

Crude oil contains carbon compounds formed by the effects of pressure and high temperature on plant and animal remnants. I It is a mixture of mainly alkane hydrocarbons which are separated by a process called fractional distillation.

Fractional distillation is the continual evaporation and condensation of a mixture which causes fractions to split due to a difference in boiling point. 

It is important to note that fractional distillation does not separate crude oil into pure compounds but rather less complex mixtures.

Fractions are groups of compounds that have similar boiling points and are removed at the same level of a fractionating column.

The first step in this process is to heat crude oil in a furnace until some changes state from a liquid to a vapour. This mixture goes up a fractionating tower or column which is hotter at the bottom than the top and reaches a layer which is cool enough to condense and be collected. Shorter chain molecules are collected at the top where it is cooler since they have lower boiling points.

As you go down the fractionating column, bear in mind that: the column temperature increases, the boiling point increases, the number of carbon atoms increases and the strength of the Van der Waals’ between molecules increases.

Fractions with lower boiling points and shorter chains are much more purposeful but are the least abundant in crude oil samples. To meet demand, long chain molecules that are less useful are broken down into shorter chain molecules. 

Cracking is a process where long chain hydrocarbon molecules are broken down into shorter chain molecules which are in high demand. 

Thermal cracking involves heating long chain alkanes to high temperatures - usually between 1000 - 1200K. It also uses high pressures up to 70atm and takes just one second. It only needs a second because the conditions could decompose the molecule completely to produce carbon and hydrogen instead. The conditions produce shorter chain alkanes and mostly alkenes.

Catalytic cracking also breaks down long alkanes by heat under pressure using the presence of a zeolite catalyst. Temperature used is approx. 800-1000K and the pressure is often between 1-2 atm. Zeolite is an acidic mineral with a honeycomb structure, made from aluminium oxide and silicion dioxide. The honeycomb structure gives the catalyst a larger surface area which increases ROR. 

You need to be able to compare the conditions of catalytic and thermal cracking for the A Level exam. Know that thermal cracking has a high temperature and pressure, a short duration, no catalyst and produces a high percentage of alkenes and some short chain alkanes. Catalytic uses a catalyst, a high temperature, a low pressure and produces aromatic hydrocarbons and motor fuels.

Happy studying!


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4 years ago

Nomenclature - what in the organic chemistry is it?

Organic chemistry is so widely studied it requires a standard system for naming compounds, developed by IUPAC. Nomenclature is simply naming these organic compounds.

So, you want to be an organic chemist? Well, it starts here. Are you ready?

(psst… once you’ve learnt this theory, try a quiz here!)

1. Count your longest continuous chain of carbons.

Bear in mind that some chains may be bent. You’re looking for the longest chain of subsequent carbon atoms. This number correlates to root names that indicate the carbon chain length, listed below:

image

The second part of naming your base comes from the bonding in the chain. Is it purely single bonds or are there double bonds in there? If you are familiar with carbon chemistry, you’ll know that saturated hydrocarbons are called alkanes and unsaturated hydrocarbons are called alkenes. Therefore, the syllable -ane is used when it has only single bonds and the syllable -ene is used when it has some double bonds. For example:

Sometimes carbon chains exist in rings rather than chains. These have the prefix of -cyclo.

2. Identify your side chains attached to this main carbon and name them.

Side chains are added as prefixes to the root names. Sometimes called substituents, these are basically anything that comes off the carbon chain. Examples of the prefixes are listed below:

image

There are other prefixes such as fluoro (-F) and chloro (-Cl) which can describe what is coming off the chain.

3. Identify where each side chain is attached and indicate the position by adding a number to the name. 

We aim to have numbers as small as possible. For example, if bromine is on the second carbon of a 5-carbon saturated chain, we number it as 2-bromopentane instead of 4-bromopentane, since it would essentially be 2-bromopentane if it was flipped. Locant is the term used for the number which describes the position of the substitute group, e.g. the ‘2′ in 2-chlorobutane is the locant.

Sometimes there are two or more side chains e.g. a methyl group and a chlorine attached to a pentane. In these cases, these rules apply:

1. Names are written alphabetically.

2. A separate number is needed for each side chain or group.

3. Hyphens are used to separate numbers and letters.

image

This would be named 2-chloro-3-methyl-pentane. This is because the longest chain of carbons is 5 (pentane), the chlorine is on the second carbon (2-chloro) and the methyl group is on the third carbon (3-methyl). It is 2-chloro rather than 4-chloro as we aim to have as small as numbers as possible.

Another variation of this step to be aware of is how many of the same side chains or groups there are, for example, having two methyl groups would be dimethyl rather than solely methyl. Each group must also be given numbers separated by commas to show where each one is located. 

The list of these prefixes is found here:

image

Convention does not usually require mono- to go before a single group or side chain.

4. Number the positions of double bonds if applicable.

Alkenes and other compounds have double bonds. These must be indicated with numbers. For example, pent-2-ene shows that the double bond is between carbon 2 and carbon 3. The number goes in the middle of the original root name e.g. butene, pentene.

(!) Below is a list of functional groups that you may need to study for the AS and A Level chemistry exams. “R” represents misc. carbons. It is important to know that some groups are more prioritised than naming. From the most to least priority: carboxylic acid, ester, acyl chloride, nitrile, aldehyde, ketone, alcohol, amine, alkene, halogenalkane. It is worthwhile learning these.

image

bigger version here (I suggest downloading and printing it)

But wait, there’s more:

Here are some things to bear in mind when naming organic compounds:

1. The letter ‘e’ is removed when there are two vowels together e.g. propanone rather than propaneone. The ‘e’ isn’t removed when it is next to consonant, e.g. propanenitrile isn’t propannitrile.

2. When compounds contain two different, one is named as part of the unbranched chain and the other is named as a substituent. Which way round this goes depends on the priority. 

SUMMARY

Count your longest continuous chain of carbons.

Chains may be bent. You’re looking for the longest chain of subsequent carbon atoms. This number correlates to root names that indicate the carbon chain length, e.g. pentane.

The second part of naming your base comes from the bonding in the chain. Is it purely single bonds or are there double bonds in there? The syllable -ane is used when it has only single bonds and the syllable -ene is used when it has some double bonds.

Rings have the prefix of -cyclo.

Identify your side chains attached to this main carbon and name them.

Side chains are added as prefixes to the root names. Sometimes called substituents, these are basically anything that comes off the carbon chain. 

There are other prefixes such as fluoro (-F) and chloro (-Cl) which can describe what is coming off the chain.

Identify where each side chain is attached and indicate the position by adding a number to the name.

We aim to have numbers as small as possible. Locant is the term used for the number which describes the position of the substitute group, e.g. the ‘2′ in 2-chlorobutane is the locant.

Sometimes there are two or more side chains e.g. a methyl group and a chlorine attached to a pentane. In these cases, names are written alphabetically, a separate number is needed for each side chain or group and hyphens are used to separate numbers and letters.

When there are two or more of the same side chains or substituent groups, these must also be given numbers separated by commas to show where each one is located.

Number the positions of double bonds if applicable.

Alkenes and other compounds have double bonds. These must be indicated with numbers. The number goes in the middle of the original root name e.g. butene, pentene.

It is worthwhile learning the other functional groups that can be added on.They have varying priorities.

The letter ‘e’ is removed when there are two vowels together e.g. propanone rather than propaneone. The ‘e’ isn’t removed when it is next to consonant, e.g. propanenitrile isn’t propannitrile.

When compounds contain two different, one is named as part of the unbranched chain and the other is named as a substituent. Which way round this goes depends on the priority.

Happy studying guys!


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4 years ago

Halogenoalkanes

Halogenoalkanes are a homologous series of saturated carbon compounds that contain one or more halogen atoms. They are used as refrigerants, solvents, flame retardants, anaesthetics and pharmaceuticals but their use has been restricted in recent years due to their link to pollution and the destruction of the ozone layer.  

They contain the functional group C-X where X represents a halogen atom, F,Cl, Br or I. The general formula of the series is CnH2n+1X.

The C-X bond is polar because the halogen atom is more electronegative than the C atom. The electronegativity decreases as you go down group 7 therefore the bond becomes less polar. Flourine has a 4.0 EN whereas iodine has a 2.5 EN meaning it is almost non-polar.

The two types of intermolecular forces between halogenoalkane molecules are Van Der Waals and permanent dipole-dipole interactions. As the carbon chain length increases, the intermolecular forces (due to VDWs) increase as the relative atomic mass increases due to more electrons creating induced dipoles. Therefore the boiling point of the halogenoalkanes increases since more forces must be broken.  

Branched chains have lower boiling points than chains of the same length and halogen because the VDWs are working across a greater distance and are therefore weaker.

When the carbon chain length is kept the same, but the halogen atom is changed, despite the effect of the changing polar bond on the permanent dipole-dipole interactions, the changing VDWs have a greater effect on the boiling point. Therefore as RAM increases, the boiling point increases meaning an iodoalkane has a greater boiling point than a bromoalkane if they have the same carbon chain length.  

Halogenoalkanes are insoluble or only slightly soluable in water despite their polar nature. They are soluble in organic solvents such as ethanol and can be used as dry cleaning agents because they can mix with other hydrocarbons.

Summary

Halogenoalkanes are saturated carbon compounds with one or more halogen atoms. Their general formula is CnH2n+1X, where X is a halogen. Their functional group is therefore C-X.

They are used as refrigerants, solvents, pharmaceuticals and anaesthetics but have been restricted due to their link to the depletion of the ozone layer.

C-X bonds are polar due to the halogen being more electronegative than the carbon. The polarity of the bond decreases down group 7.

Van der Waals and permanent dipole-dipole interactions are the intermolecular forces in halogenoalkanes.

When carbon chain length increases, boiling points increase due to RAM increasing and the number of Van Der Waals increasing too.

In branched halogenoalkanes, Van Der Waals are working across a greater distance therefore attraction is weaker and boiling points are lower than an identical unbranched chain.

When the halogen is changed, the boiling point increases down the group due to the effect of a greater RAM  - more VDWs mean more intermolecular forces to break.  

Halogenoalkanes are insoluble in water but soluble in organic solvents like ethanol.

Bonus: free radical substitution reactions in the ozone layer

Ozone, O3, is an allotrope of oxygen that is usually found in the stratosphere above the surface of the Earth. The ozone layer prevents harmful rays of ultraviolet light from reaching the Earth by enhancing the absorption of UV light by nitrogen and oxygen. UV light causes sunburn, cataracts and skin cancer but is also essential in vitamin D production. Scientists have observed a depletion in the ozone layer protecting us and have linked it to photochemical chain reactions by halogen free radicals, sourced from halogenoalkanes which were used a solvents, propellants and refrigerants at the time.  

CFCs cause the greatest destruction due to their chlorine free radicals. CFCs – chloroflouroalkanes – were once valued for their lack of toxicity and their non-flammability. This stability means that they do not degrade and instead diffuse into the stratosphere where UV light breaks down the C-Cl bond and produces chlorine free radicals.

RCF2Cl UV light —> RCF2● + Cl●

Chlorine free radicals then react with ozone, decomposing it to form oxygen.

Cl● + O3 —> ClO● + O2

Chlorine radical is then reformed by reacting with more ozone molecules.

ClO● + O3 —-> 2O2 + Cl●

It is estimated that one chlorine free radical can decompose 100 000 molecules of ozone. The overall equation is:

2O3 —-> 3O2

200 countries pledged to phase of the production of ozone depleting agents in Montreal, leading to a search for alternatives. Chemists have developed and synthesised alternative chlorine-free compounds that do not deplete the ozone layer such as hydroflurocarbons (HFCs) like trifluromethane, CHF3.

SUMMARY

Ozone, found in the stratosphere, protects us from harmful UV light which can cause cataracts, skin cancer and sunburn.  

Ozone depletion has been linked to the use of halogenoalkanes due to their halogen free radicals.  

CFCs were good chemicals to use because they have low toxicity and were non-flammable. The fact they don’t degrade means they diffuse into the stratosphere. 

Chlorine free radicals are made when CFCs are broken down by UV light.

These go on to react with ozone to produce oxygen.

Chlorine free radicals are then reformed by reacting with more ozone.

It is a chain reaction that can deplete over 100 000 molecules of ozone.

There is a 200 country ban on their use and scientists have developed alternatives like hydrofluorocarbons to replace them

Happy studying!


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4 years ago

The Name’s Bond ... Ionic Bond.

This is the first in my short series of the three main types of bond - ionic, metallic and covalent. In this, you’ll learn about the properties of the compounds, which atoms they’re found between and how the bonds are formed. Enjoy!

When electrons are transferred from a metal to a non-metal, an ionic compound is formed. Metals usually lose electrons and non-metals usually gain them to get to a noble gas configuration. Transition metals do not always achieve this.

Charged particles that have either lost or gained electrons are called ions and are no longer neutral - metal atoms lose electrons to become positive ions (cations) whereas non-metals gain electrons to become negative ions (anions).

The formation of these ions is usually shown using electron configurations. Make sure you know that the transfer of electrons is not the bond but how the ions are formed. 

An ionic bond is the electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions.

You need to know how to explain how atoms react with other atoms and for this the electron configurations are needed. You can use dot and cross diagrams for this. 

The Name’s Bond ... Ionic Bond.

Ionic solids hold ions in 3D structures called ionic lattices. A lattice is a repeating 3D pattern in a crystalline solid. For example, NaCl has a 6:6 arrangement - each Na+ ion is surrounded by 6 Cl- and vice versa. 

Ionic solids have many strong electrostatic attractions between their ions. The crystalline shape can be decrepitated (cracked) on heating. Ionic Lattices have high melting and boiling points since they need more energy to break because atoms are held together by lots of strong electrostatic attractions between positive and negative ions. The boiling point of an ionic compound depends on the size of the atomic radius and the charge of the ion. The smaller the ion and the higher the charge, the stronger attraction.

The Name’s Bond ... Ionic Bond.

Look at this diagram. It shows how atomic radius decreases across a period regularly. This is not the case with the ions. Positive ions are usually smaller than the atoms they came from because metal atoms lose electrons meaning the nuclear charge increases which draws the electrons closer to the nucleus. For negative ions, they become larger because repulsion between electrons moves them further away - nuclear charge also decreases as more electrons to the same number of protons.

Ionic substances can conduct electricity through the movement of charged particles when molten or dissolved (aqueous). This is because when they are like this, electrons are free to move and carry a charge. Ionic solids cannot conduct electricity.

The Name’s Bond ... Ionic Bond.

Ionic compounds are usually soluble in water. This is because the polar water molecules cluster around ions which have broken off the lattice and so separate them from each other. Some substances like aluminium oxide have too strong electrostatic attractions so water cannot break up the lattice - it is insoluble in water.

Molecular ions such as sulfate, nitrate, ammonium or carbonate can exist within ionic compounds. These compounds may have covalent bonds within the ions but overall they are ionic and exhibit thee properties described above.

SUMMARY

When electrons are transferred from a metal to a non-metal, an ionic compound is formed.

Charged particles that have either lost or gained electrons are called ions and are no longer neutral - metal atoms lose electrons to become positive ions (cations) whereas non-metals gain electrons to become negative ions (anions).

The formation of these ions is usually shown using electron configurations. The transfer of electrons is not the bond but how the ions are formed.

An ionic bond is the electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions.

Ionic solids hold ions in 3D structures called ionic lattices. A lattice is a repeating 3D pattern in a crystalline solid.

Ionic solids have many strong electrostatic attractions between their ions. The crystalline shape can be decrepitated (cracked) on heating. 

Ionic Lattices have high melting and boiling points since they need more energy to break because atoms are held together by lots of strong electrostatic attractions between positive and negative ions.

The boiling point of an ionic compound depends on the size of the atomic radius and the charge of the ion. The smaller the ion and the higher the charge, the stronger attraction.

 Positive ions are usually smaller than the atoms they came from because metal atoms lose electrons meaning the nuclear charge increases which draws the electrons closer to the nucleus. Negative ions become larger because repulsion between electrons moves them further away - nuclear charge also decreases as more electrons to the same number of protons.

Ionic substances can conduct electricity through the movement of charged particles when molten or dissolved (aqueous). This is because when they are like this, electrons are free to move and carry a charge. Ionic solids cannot conduct electricity.

Ionic compounds are usually soluble in water because the polar water molecules cluster around ions which have broken off the lattice and so separate them from each other.

 Some substances like aluminium oxide have too strong electrostatic attractions so water cannot break up the lattice - it is insoluble in water.

Molecular ions such as sulfate, nitrate, ammonium or carbonate can exist within ionic compounds. These compounds may have covalent bonds within the ions but overall they are ionic and exhibit thee properties described above.


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